World Stage Design
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Edited by Kate Burnett
Softcover Catalogue
Portrait, 21×29.7 cm
Number of Pages: 223
ISBN: 978–0–9529309–7–6
Purchase a copy of the catalogue
Jean-Marc Puissant
Set Design / Costume Design
Les Pêcheurs de Perles
Georges Bizet
The Crosby Theatre, Santa Fe
Santa Fe Opera
June 2012
Jean-Marc Puissant: The set design embraces the notion of quoting an Orientalist plot within an 1860’s French opera presented in a contemporary open-air opera house. Theatre architecture and scaffoldings hold two walls of an 1860’s building being restored. A mid-stage gilded frame echoes giant Empire paintings and proscenium arches of the period of composition. Upstage, the pictorial depiction of an ancient temple enables the plot to exist and the story to unfold.
Collaborators:
Set designer: Jean-Marc Puissant
Costume designer: Brigitte Reiffenstuel
Lighting designer: Rick Fisher
Director: Director: Lee Blakeley
Photographer: Ken Howard
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Art 1: Market scene
Throughout the performance, the staging juxtaposes the different worlds. In this scene, downstage, Nadir and Zurga remember the times when, in their youth, they first saw and fell in love with Leila. Upstage, within the ‘quote’ of the frame, we see their younger selves living this intense moment, bathed in the nostalgia of memory, standing against the natural Santa Fe sunset.
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Act 2: ‘Au fond du temple saint…’
As the characters’ drama unfolds, the space undergoes the ravages of a natural disaster. The frame collapses, the 1860’s walls are stripped to expose red brick, the upstage temple is mostly destroyed and becomes piles of rubble accumulated downstage. Now set against the real black night sky, the image resembles the shore of a bleak seascape. Here, eager to soothe the anger of their gods, the villagers build a pyre and demand that Zurga should die.
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Act 3: ‘Dés que le soleil..’
Aeternum
Christopher Wheeldon
Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London
The Royal Ballet Company
February 2013
Jean-Marc Puissant: This abstract, contemporary ballet follows the dramatic line of Britten’ score. Although it remains plotless, we witness the journey of a female character within a group of more abstract performers.
Collaborators:
Set and Costume designer: Jean-Marc Puissant
Lighting designer;, Adam Silverman
Choreographer: Christopher Wheeldon
Music: Benjamin Britten, Sinforia da Requiem
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The dramatic First Movement is set under an organic three-dimensional structure, architecturally lit, starting as a low composition close to stage level within a full black space, slowly rising until suddenly bursting into a monumental composition filing the stage.
Photographer: Tristram Kenton
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In the disturbing atmosphere of the Second Movement, the structure looks like a fragmented, three-dimensional wooden take on a Turner sky. Strong back lighting uses the hanging structure’s composition to cast shadows breaking down the expanse of pale grey dance floor. The off- centred, upward curve of the grey floor’s upstage complete the image by introducing a most minimal and abstract notion of a landscape.
Photographer: Ivor Kerslake
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Th flown structure vanishes during a set of quick, nervous black-outs at the end of the Second Movement, leaving the stage absolutely empty except for the gentle curve of the suggested horizon line. Having gone through a set of dramatic thresholds, the principal character is led to a final state of eternal cam – and to eternity. Rid of the dark dress she wore for the First and Second Movements, she has joined the world of the more abstract, desaturated performers that surrounded her.
Photographer: Tristram Kenton